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"The Huns have often been treated as primitive barbarians with no advanced political organisation. Their place of origin was the so-called 'backward steppe'. It has been argued that whatever political organisation they achieved they owed to the 'civilizing influence' of the Germanic peoples they encountered as they moved west. This book argues that the steppes of Inner Asia were far from 'backward' and that the image of the primitive Huns is vastly misleading. They already possessed a highly sophisticated political culture while still in Inner Asia and, far from being passive recipients of advanced culture from the West, they passed on important elements of Central Eurasian culture to early medieval Europe, which they helped create. Their expansion also marked the beginning of a millennium of virtual monopoly of world power by empires originating in the steppes of Inner Asia. The rise of the Hunnic Empire was truly a geopolitical revolution."--
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Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe
2013, Cambridge University Press
in English
1107069378 9781107069374
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Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe
2013, Cambridge University Press
in English
0511920490 9780511920493
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Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe
2013, Cambridge University Press
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1299634362 9781299634367
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Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe
2013, Cambridge University Press
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1107009065 9781107009066
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Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe
2013, Cambridge University Press
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1107057590 9781107057593
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